• NinjaKlaus
    +3

    Yes, and most tomatoes and beans have been grafted at some point which is a form of GMOing, that still doesn't negate the fact I wouldn't mind being told what's in my food. The same way they don't just say there is fat in my food, they break it down into Trans, Mono, etc...

    • hallucigenia (edited 9 years ago)
      +2

      Eating different types of fat can have health consequences, so having that information is relevant to you. There is no difference between a plant that was produced via GMO vs. selective breeding. So, unless you have some ethical reason for rejecting GMOs, having that information gives you zero benefit.